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Showing posts with label Lahaina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lahaina. Show all posts

Friday, September 08, 2023

TREESILIENCE

by Deb Freedman


While the Lahaina banyan tree has yet to rebound back to its pre-fire splendor, signs of life are very much there, according to landscape contractor Chris Imonti. “We did root samples last week and we had very good news as far as new life in the roots. A lot of new roots shooting off. We tested the moisture and arborist Steve Nims, who is the unofficial leader of the Banyan Tree hui has analyzed all the treatments and he is out today putting sensors on the tree to measure growth rates. With the compost tea we are seeing good results and as long as we give it enough love, I think it’s going to be fine,” Imonti commented. Additional measures have been put into place by the hui (group) who are caring for Lahaina banyan tree and working towards its restoration. The ground and soil around the tree is being regularly aerated, and it is often being treated with a “tree-loving soup,” a mix of nutrients Imonti himself formulated for the recovering banyan. Additionally, volunteers are spreading chopped up alfalfa, a legume—a soil enhancing green manure—around the base of the tree to aid in its recovery. —Hawaii Magazine, September 6, 2023


In Tallahassee,
Hurricane Idalia hurled
a 100-year-old oak tree.

The tree’s fall
fractured
Governor DeSantis’ mansion
in his absence.
Notified of its collapse,
the governor was optimistic.
He told reporters,
if the entire tree needs to be cut,
“…that’s just going to be more room
for my kids to hit baseballs in.”

In Lahaina, Maui,
a 150-year-old banyan tree,
the heart of the town,
devoured by
fast-spreading wildfires
spurred by human error
stands
scorched
living tissue at its core.

Kanaka
in grief,
some homeless,
some looking for lost loves,
nourish the banyan tree
with water
and organic compost
in a town burnt
but not of love nor hope.

Steve Nims, arborist tree tender,
says it is “kind of in a coma…
There are good signs the tree will recover…
It’s up to the tree.”

Deb Freedman is a poet living in Pennsylvania. Her poems have been published in The New Verse News and DVP/US 1’s Worksheets 67. She hopes the oak and banyan trees survive and thrive.

Tuesday, August 15, 2023

MAUI BANYAN

by Amy Barone




Home to chatty mynah birds, you flank 
the Old Lahaina Courthouse by the ocean
 
on an island of sugar cane hills, Hana sunsets,
historic red wood buildings and Ka’anapali Beach.
 
Stretching nearly two acres with 16 trunks,
cousin to the fig tree, hub for Maui’s
 
huge Halloween party and costume parade,
you star as stage and shelter for natives and tourists.
 
A century and a half old, now survivor of brutal wildfires 
that charred cars and an enchanting town that I first visited
 
as a wide-eyed teen on vacation, marveling at your vastness, 
that paradise exists in an old whaling village in the USA.

Amy Barone’s poetry collection Defying Extinction was published by Broadstone Books in 2022. New York Quarterly Books published her book We Became Summer. She wrote chapbooks Kamikaze Dance (Finishing Line Press) and Views from the Driveway(Foothills Publishing.) Barone belongs to the Poetry Society of America. She lives in New York City.

Saturday, August 12, 2023

THE PERFECT HOME

by Indran Amirthanayagam




while Lahaina, Maui burns August, 2023



May I imagine the scene? Do you

agree? Coffee in the studio, light

streaming in, brushes and easel,


a multi-hued cat? But flames

are rising at five hundred yards.

Oh to leap beyond particulate


matter, to dream, go native 

again, python wrapped  round 

banyan branch, peeping through 


the window while monkey hops 

over the ledge and books, 

to the sugar bowl, scatters 


the grains, attracting flies, 

mosquitoes, the ubiquitous 

roach. Paradise does not look 


sweet. Fireball blows up history, 

belief, certainty, and cars,

drivers burned at the wheel, 


while thousands of miles

away as all birds fly,

by pure chance, living


on the mainland, in another 

corner of  the great expanse

of the once blue ball,


I try in vain to catch 

and douse embers flying 

this month’s perfect storm.



Indran Amirthanayagam is the translator of Origami: Selected Poems of Manuel Ulacia (Dialogos Books)Ten Thousand Steps Against the Tyrant (BroadstoneBooks) is the newest collection of Indran's own poems. Recently published is Blue Window (Ventana Azul), translated by Jennifer Rathbun.(Dialogos Books). In 2020, Indran produced a “world" record by publishing three new poetry books written in three languages: The Migrant States (Hanging Loose Press, New York), Sur l'île nostalgique (L’Harmattan, Paris) and Lírica a tiempo (Mesa Redonda, Lima). He edits The Beltway Poetry Quarterly and helps curate Ablucionistas. He won the Paterson Prize and received fellowships from The Foundation for the Contemporary Arts, New York Foundation for the Arts, US/Mexico Fund For Culture, and the MacDowell Colony. He hosts the Poetry Channel on YouTube and publishes poetry books with Sara Cahill Marron at Beltway Editions.